ROHNERT PARK, Calif. -- A Northern California police officer who was caught on video drawing his gun on a man who was not accused of a crime has been placed on temporary paid administrative leave.

KNTV reports Friday that Rohnert Park Assistant City Manager Don Schwartz said in a statement that the incident on the video was not a "typical interaction" between police and the public.

CBS San Francisco reports that the Rohnert Park Department of Public Safety canceled Thursday's scheduled "Coffee with a Cop" event with community members in the wake of the video's release. The video posted on Facebook July 29 by the resident, Don McComas, has gone viral and is drawing heated reaction from citizens on social media sites.

The Coffee with a Cop event was scheduled Thursday at a McDonald's restaurant on Commerce Boulevard before the department announced its cancellation.

"We have information that individuals from outside the community have voiced an interest in using this event to cause a disturbance, potentially putting our community as risk," the department said in a statement Thursday morning.

In the five-minute video posted by McComas, the officer arrives in a patrol car at a residence and remains in his car while McComas records the contact on his cellphone.

The officer gets out of the car after about 90 seconds, approaches McComas with his gun drawn and tells McComas to take his hand out of his pocket.

McComas objects and tells the officer he has done nothing wrong and tells the officer to go away.

"You guys have done enough to my family," McComas says, and accuses police of being corrupt.

"Are you some kind of constitutionalist crazy guy?" the officer asks at one point.

The video had been viewed more than 190,000 times by Friday morning.

Rohnert Park Mayor Amy Ahanotu and City Manager Darrin Jenkins said in a statement Tuesday that they are aware of the matter and are taking it seriously. They said they are conducting an internal review to verify if appropriate protocols were followed.

"We will also review our protocols because we want to make sure we are using the best practices for the highest level of safety for both our officers and the community," Ahanotu and Jenkins said.